The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

A9 dualling delay fears

But transport secretary reaffirms commitment to finishing project

- BY CALUM ROSS

Transport Secretary Michael Matheson has reiterated the Scottish Government’s commitment to dualling the A9 and A96 – but admitted the timetable could be hit by further delays.

Worth a combined £6 billion, the two road projects aim to ensure that all of Scotland’s cities are linked by dual carriagewa­ys.

Work on the phased upgrade of 80 miles of single carriagewa­y along the A9 between Perth and Inverness began in 2015 and has been pencilled in for completion by 2025.

Designs for dualling 86 miles of the A96 between Aberdeen and Inverness are due to be published this year, with completion set for 2030.

The projects have been considered long overdue by many motorists, business leaders and safety campaigner­s in northern Scotland, despite local controvers­ies over routes. However, they are among the most expensive capital schemes undertaken by the Scottish Government, and critics have regularly called for them to be ditched, with the money spent elsewhere.

The financial impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic is now expected to reignite such demands, but Mr Matheson said there was no change to the government’s commitment, and that work would restart imminently.

“Of course constructi­on work has stopped due to the lockdown arrangemen­ts,” he said in an exclusive interview.

“I would expect to see constructi­on work on the A9 start again in the weeks ahead as we move through the phases of the route map, which allows for constructi­on work to take place.

“On the A96, some of the public-facing elements of the work have had to be suspended due to the lockdown arrangemen­ts,” added Mr Matheson.

“However, the work that can be taken forward, within terms of planning matters around design and so on, that has continued to be taken forward by the companies that are engaged in that process during the course of the lockdown period, because that is work that can largely be taken forward at an office-based level.

“But as a government we remain committed to both the dualling programmes, and I would expect to see constructi­on activity starting again on the A9 once we move into a phase where it is safe for constructi­on work to start again.”

Asked whether the coronaviru­s lockdown would have a lasting impact on the timetable for both projects, Mr Matheson said: “It is too early to say at this particular stage about what the implicatio­ns would be on the timetable.

“Part of that is that there are a range of things that could have an impact on it.

“So for example, some of the constructi­on work that has been delayed on the A9, it may be that the contractor­s catch up on that work if the weather during the course of the summer months and into the autumn is favourable for them.

“However, if the weather isn’t good, it could limit their ability to recover that timetable.

“So it is too early to say at this stage as to what exact impact it will have on the timetable,” Mr Matheson added.

“I would expect to get a better understand­ing of that as we go forward later in the year.”

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 ??  ?? PLEDGE: Scottish Transport Secretary Michael Matheson wants the projects to resume
PLEDGE: Scottish Transport Secretary Michael Matheson wants the projects to resume
 ??  ?? The single carriagewa­y A9 is to be dualled along its 80 miles between Perth and Inverness in a massive project
The single carriagewa­y A9 is to be dualled along its 80 miles between Perth and Inverness in a massive project

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